Family and friends sang "Tu Nos Dijiste," or "You Told Us," in front of altar where Selena's mother, Estela, had placed photos of Hidalgo-Calderon, flowers, candles and rosaries.

A framed photo of Selena in a red tank top, hair thrown over her left shoulder, was a reminder that while Selena was a mom and a worker, she was still just a teenager.

Sara Curtis, program coordinator at the Worker Justice Center of Central New York, said Sunday was a "heavy day" for people at the service.

"We found a lot of faith, energy and support from the community being together, praying together, grieving together," Curtis said.

Curtis talked about the difficulty for immigrant workers to get help in domestic violence situations.

"So if it's hard for a U.S. woman to get access to services to get out of a dangerous situation, that's even more exacerbated for an immigrant farm worker who is isolated on a rural farm," she said.

Hidalgo-Calderon is a native of Guatemala.

Hidalgo-Calderon's family also has scheduled a news conference for 10 a.m. Tuesday in Syracuse. Her boyfriend, Everardo Donoteo-Reyes, 25, is a suspect in the homicide case but so far has not been charged.

He has, however, been charged with tampering with evidence after allegedly moving her body. On Friday, he was charged with illegally re-entering the United States and possessing counterfeit documents.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office charged him with having counterfeit Social Security and alien registration cards and with illegally coming back into the country after he was deported to Mexico in 2016. The charges each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Donoteo-Reyes, who also goes by the name Alberto Ebavardo Gutierrez-Reyes, is scheduled to appear at 3 p.m. Monday in federal court in Rochester.

Wayne County Second Assistant District Attorney Christine Callanan said Donoteo-Reyes admitted he moved or concealed Hidalgo-Calderon's body, which was found in a bag on Joy Road, because he feared being deported or blamed for her death. On May 29, Donoteo-Reyes was brought into Sodus Town Court in a black-and-white jail uniform, his hands shackled and his ankles chained together.

Hidalgo-Calderon spoke little English. Officials say she had been in the U.S. since November 2016 and was in the process of being deported, although her family had pending applications for asylum.

She lived in the Sodus area for about three months with Donoteo-Reyes, whom she met while working at another area farm. The pair had lived together since November 2017.

While the search for Owen has suspended, Virts pleaded that anybody with information regarding the missing infant contact the Wayne County Sheriff's Office.

"We still hold hope ... but right now, we're just spinning our wheels," he said.